2. Preface
Most small to medium-sized businesses struggle with marketing. The marketing function is often treated as a
cost center--ad hoc activities that don’t provide measurable results that can be tracked to the bottom line.
This e-book defines our Strategic Marketing Process that businesses can use to standardize their daily, monthly
and annual revenue-generating activities.
It covers more than just “traditional” marketing and ties together all go-to-market business activities: strategic
planning, financial planning and measurement, creative development, marketing execution and sales.
If you’re a business marketer or executive, complete the Key Concepts and Steps section in each subject to
improve your performance throughout the year. Your team may also want to signup for a free subscription to
our marketing how-to articles and tips at www.MarketingMO.com.
If you’re a consultant or service firm interested in our web-based consulting practice management software and
tools based on the marketing process, please visit us at www.ConsultingMO.com. Our offering gives consultants
the infrastructure and a license to deliver the services listed in the Key Concepts and Steps section of each
subject of this e-book.
Certified licensees can be
Business consultants
Marketing consultants with expertise in a specific function
Sales coaches
Advertising agencies
Graphic design firms
Marketing communications firms
Web design/development firms
PR firms
Aspiring entrepreneurs who are looking for a new business opportunity
If you’re interested in hiring one of our distributor consultants, please visit
www.MarketingMO.com/consultants/.
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3. Contents
page 3
Introduction 6
13
10
21
24 17 47
28
36 32
38 56
41
0
Sales Literature 74
44 & Tools 50
Sales
Management
62 59
65
Email 80
Marketing
71 77
Online
Advertising
68
Search
Marketing
53
Recruiting 83 Business
Development
Vendor Selection 85
Return on Investment 87
Customer Lifetime Value 90
Copywriting & Graphic Design 93
What’s Next
page 96
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4. Introduction
What is marketing? It’s a broad, challenging and often misunderstood function. Ask several people to
define it and you’ll probably get very different answers:
It’s brochures and slogans and print ads in magazines
It’s websites and email campaigns
It’s communicating with customers
It’s an MBA crunching numbers on brand equity and market share
Yet marketing is much more than brochures and websites and numbers; it’s an investment that generates
revenue, profit and opportunity for growth.
Marketing is the process of developing and communicating value to your prospects and
customers. Think about every step you take to sell, service and manage your customers:
Your knowledge of the market and your strategy to penetrate it
The distribution channels you use to connect with your customers
Your pricing strategy
The messages you deliver to your market
The look and feel of your marketing materials
The experience you deliver to your market and customers
The actions of your sales and service reps
All of the planning, preparation, forecasting and measurement of your investments
Good marketing is essential for every company. It can make a company with a mediocre product
successful, but poor marketing can send a good company out of business. Yet even business-to-business (B2B)
marketing is often seen as a soft creative field instead of the engine that drives company revenue.
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5. Key concepts & steps
The Strategic Marketing Process organizes 29 marketing subjects into three categories:
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6. This guidebook provides a short, essential introduction for each subject. The maps also show how one subject is
linked to others.
In a perfect world, you would start with competitive positioning and build your entire marketing program
following this process. Unless you’re a startup company, you probably don’t have time to do so; you need to
focus on the task at hand. That’s fine. Use your M.O. to tackle projects as they come up.
Marketing is complex, but don’t shy away from subjects that could help you grow your business; repetition is
the key to success. Embrace marketing, and most importantly, enjoy creating and communicating your value to
your market.
Good luck!
NOTE
The Strategic Marketing Process is designed for
business-to-business (B2B) marketers. Business-to-
consumer marketers (B2C) follow a similar process, with a
few additional subjects like product placement, market
demographics and packaging.
In addition, all of the concepts and instructions in
the process apply to both product marketing and
service marketing. However, the phrase
“product/service” is long and distracting, so we just use the
term “product.”
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7. Competitive Positioning
What sets your product, service and company apart from your competitors? What value do you provide and
how is it different than the alternatives?
Competitive positioning is about defining how you’ll “differentiate” your offering and create
value for your market. It’s about carving out a spot in the competitive landscape and focusing your
company to deliver on that strategy. A good strategy includes:
Market profile: size, competitors, stage of growth
Customer segments: groups of prospects with similar wants & needs
Competitive analysis: strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats in the landscape
Positioning strategy: how you’ll position your offering to focus on opportunities in the market
Value proposition: the type of value you’ll deliver to the market
When your market clearly sees how your offering is different than that of your competition, it’s easier to
generate new prospects and guide them to buy. Without differentiation, it takes more time and money to show
prospects why they should choose you; as a result, you often end up competing on price – a tough position to
sustain over the long term.
One of the key elements of your positioning strategy is your value proposition. There are three
essential types of value: operational excellence, product leadership and customer intimacy.
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8. Here is a hypothetical example of each type of value.
OPERATIONAL
PRODUCT LEADERSHIP CUSTOMER INTIMACY
EXCELLENCE
Starboard’s market is flooded with
Carrot Technology’s customers don’t
Alpha Co.’s customers care most products at all ends of the price
want bells and whistles, just a good
about quality – they want the best spectrum.
product at the lowest possible price.
product.
Yet Starboard’s customers want more
Carrot focuses on operational
Alpha is completely dedicated to than a product off the shelf; they
excellence so they can continually
innovation and quality. They’re want customized solutions. So
offer the lowest price in the market.
constantly working on product Starboard’s mission is to know as
For example, they just patented a new
improvements and new ideas that much as possible about their
machine that dramatically lowers
they can bring to market. They know customers’ businesses so they can
their costs. They’re not trying to come
what their competitors are doing and deliver the correct solutions over
up with new or better products; they
are completely focused on staying one time.
just want to produce more volume at a
step ahead in order to capture a
lower cost.
greater share of their market. Starboard knows they can’t just say
“We offer great service.” Starboard’s
Carrot’s value proposition is
Alpha’s culture is all about product team knows they have to deliver on
operational excellence; they convey it
leadership, and their prospects see it that value proposition in every
in their messages and in everything
even before they become customers. interaction they have with prospects
they do.
and customers.
These companies are totally focused on delivering their value propositions. They don’t just say it -- they do it,
and that makes it easier to win in their respective markets.
Rather than leaving your positioning and value proposition to chance, establish a strategy. Think impartially
about the wants and needs of your customers and what your competition offers. You may find an unmet need
in the market, or you may realize that you need to find a way to differentiate from your competitors.
As a result, you may decide to promote a different attribute of your product, or you may find entirely new
opportunities to create new products and services. Either way, you’ll strengthen your business in both the short
and long term.
BEST CASE NEUTRAL CASE WORST CASE
You provide a one-of-a-kind Your product is somewhat Your prospects see little difference
product/service that your market different and better than those of between you and your competitors,
needs and wants. You have a strong your competitors and you so you’re competing solely on price.
value proposition that differentiates communicate that difference,
you from your competitors; you though probably not as You have to fight long and hard for
communicate it consistently in consistently as you should. Your every sale.
everything you do. Your prospects prospects partially buy into the
respond because you’re meeting their value you provide, but you don’t It’s very difficult to meet your
needs, and your company has found win all of the deals that you revenue and profit goals.
success in the market. could.
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9. Key concepts & steps
Before you begin
Your competitive positioning strategy is the foundation of your entire business – it’s the
first thing you should do if you’re launching a new company or product. It’s also
important when you’re expanding or looking for a new edge.
Profile your market
Document the size of your market, major competitors and how they’re positioned.
Determine whether your market is in the introductory, growth, mature, or declining stage of its life.
This “lifecycle stage” affects your entire marketing strategy.
Segment your market
Understand the problems that your market faces. Talk with prospects and customers, or conduct
research if you have the time, budget and opportunity. Uncover their true wants and needs – you’ll
learn a great deal about what you can deliver to solve their problems and beat your competitors.
Group your prospects into “segments” that have similar problems and can use your product in similar
ways. By grouping them into segments, you can efficiently market to each group.
Evaluate your competition
List your competitors. Include any competitors that can solve your customers’ problems, even if their
solutions are much different than yours – they’re still your competition.
Rate your own company and your direct competitors on operational efficiency (price), product
leadership and customer intimacy. It’s easy to think you’re the best, so be as impartial as you can.
Stake a position
Identify areas where your competition is vulnerable.
Determine whether you can focus on those vulnerable areas – they’re major opportunities.
Identify products/services you can offer to meet the true needs of your market in a new and better way.
Define your value proposition
There are three core types of value that a company can deliver: operational efficiency (the lowest price),
product leadership (the best product), or customer intimacy (the best solution & service). Determine
which one you’re best equipped to deliver; your decision is your “value proposition.”
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10. What’s next?
Develop a brand strategy to help you communicate your positioning and value
proposition every time you touch your market. Together, these strategies are the
essential building blocks for your business.
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11. Brand Strategy
What is a brand? Is it a logo? A name or slogan? A graphic design or color scheme?
Your brand is the entire experience your prospects and customers have with your company. It’s
what you stand for, a promise you make, and the personality you convey. And while it includes your
logo, color palette and slogan, those are only creative elements that convey your brand. Instead, your brand
lives in every day-t0-day interaction you have with your market:
The images you convey
The messages you deliver on your website, proposals and sales materials
The way your employees interact with customers
A customer’s opinion of you versus your competition
Branding is crucial for products and services sold in huge consumer markets. It’s also important in B2B
because it helps you stand out from your competition. It brings your competitive position and value
proposition to life; it positions you as a certain “something” in the mind of your prospects and customers.
Your brand consistently and repeatedly tells your prospects and customers why they should buy from you.
Think about successful consumer brands like Disney, Tiffany or Starbucks. You probably know what each
brand represents. Now imagine that you’re competing against one of these companies. If you want to capture
significant market share, start with a strong and unique brand identity or you may not get far.
In your industry, there may or may not be a strong B2B brand. But when you put two companies up against
each other, the one that represents something valuable will have an easier time reaching, engaging, closing and
retaining customers. A strong brand strategy can be a big advantage.
Successful branding also creates “brand equity” – the amount of money that customers are willing to pay just
because it’s your brand. In addition to generating revenue, brand equity makes your company itself more
valuable over the long term.
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12. By defining your brand strategy and using it in every interaction with your market, you strengthen your
messages and relationships.
BEST CASE NEUTRAL CASE WORST CASE
You don’t have a brand strategy
Prospects and customers know exactly The market may not have a
and it shows. It’s more difficult to
what you deliver. consistent view or impression of
communicate with prospects and
your product and company, but in
convince them to buy. They don’t
It’s easy to begin dialogue with new general you think it’s positive.
have an impression of your
prospects because they quickly
product or why it’s better.
understand what you stand for. You haven’t thought a lot about
branding because it doesn’t
What you do, what you say and
You close deals more quickly because necessarily seem relevant, but you
how you say it may contradict each
your prospects’ experience with you admit that you can do a better job
other and confuse your prospects.
supports everything you say. of communicating consistently
with the market.
Competitors who communicate
You can charge a premium because
more strongly have a better shot at
your market knows why you’re better You’re not helping yourself but
talking with and closing your
and is willing to pay for it. you’re not hurting yourself either.
prospective customers.
Key concepts & steps
Before you begin
Before working on your brand strategy, make sure you’ve
identified your competitive position – your brand strategy
will bring it to life.
If you have a brand strategy, make sure it’s as effective
as possible
Poll your customers, employees and vendors. Are their impressions consistent with your strategy? If
not, work on the elements you can improve.
Develop your brand strategy around emotional benefits
List the features and benefits of your product / service. A feature is an attribute – a color, a
configuration; a benefit is what that feature does for the customer.
Determine which benefits are most important to each of your customer segments.
Identify which benefits are emotional – the most powerful brand strategies tap into emotions, even
among business buyers.
Look at the emotional benefits and boil them down to one thing that your customers should think of
when they think of you. That’s what your brand should represent.
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13. Define your brand
Think of your brand as a person with a distinct personality. Describe him or her, then convey these
traits in everything you do and create.
Write positioning statements and a story about your brand; use them throughout your company
materials.
Choose colors, fonts and other visual elements that match your personality.
Determine how your employees will interact with prospects and customers to convey the personality
and make sure your brand “lives” within your company.
What’s next?
Together with your competitive positioning strategy, your
brand strategy is the essence of what you represent. A great
brand strategy helps you communicate more effectively with
your market, so follow it in every interaction you have with
your prospects and customers.
For example, you’ll communicate your brand strategy
through your pricing strategy, name and corporate
identity, messages, literature and website. It may also
drive the need to implement a better CRM system to manage customer relationships.
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14. Distribution Channels
How do you sell to your end-users? Do you use a direct sales team? Resellers? A catalog or website?
Distribution channels are the pathways that companies use to sell their products to end-users.
B2B companies can sell through a single channel or through multiple channels that may include
Direct/sales team: One or more sales teams that you employ directly. You may use multiple teams
that specialize in different products or customer segments.
Direct/internet: Selling through your own e-commerce website.
Direct/catalog: Selling through your own catalog.
Wholesaler/distributor: A company that buys products in bulk from many manufacturers and then
re-sells smaller volumes to resellers or retailers.
Value-added reseller (VAR): A VAR works with end-users to provide custom solutions that may
include multiple products and services from different manufacturers.
Consultant: A consultant develops relationships with companies and provides either specific or very
broad services; they may recommend a manufacturer’s product or simply purchase it to deliver a
solution for the customer.
Dealer: A company or person who buys inventory from either a manufacturer or distributor, then re-
sells to an end-user.
Retail: Retailers sell directly to end-users via a physical store, website or catalog.
Sales agent/manufacturer’s rep: You can outsource your sales function to a company that sells
different manufacturers’ products to a group of similar customers in a specific territory.
Distribution is one of the classic “4 Ps” of marketing (product, promotion, price, placement a.k.a.
distribution). It’s a key element in your entire marketing strategy -- it helps you expand your reach and grow
revenue.
Here are three distribution examples:
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15. SELL THROUGH A SELL THROUGH A VAR
DIRECT TO END USERS
DEALER NETWORK (VALUE-ADDED RESELLER)
You have a sales team that sells You sell a product through a You sell a product to a company who
directly to Fortune 100 companies. geographical network of dealers bundles it with services or other
who sell to end-users in their products and re-sells it. That
You have a second product line for areas. The dealers may service the company is called a Value Added
small businesses. Instead of using product as well. Reseller (VAR) because it adds value
your sales team, you sell this line to your product.
directly to end-users through your Your dealers are essentially your
website and marketing campaigns. customers, and you have a strong A VAR may work with an end-user to
program to train and support them determine the right products and
You have two markets and two with marketing campaigns and configurations, then implement a
distribution channels. materials. system that includes your product.
To create a good distribution program, focus on the needs of your end-users.
If they need personalized service, you can utilize a local dealer network or reseller program to provide
that service.
If your users prefer to buy online, you can create an e-commerce website and fulfillment system and sell
direct; you can also sell to another online retailer or a distributor to offer your product on their own
sites.
You can build your own specialized sales team to prospect and close deals directly with customers.
Wholesalers, resellers, retailers, consultants and agents already have resources and relationships to quickly
bring your product to market. If you sell through these groups instead of (or in addition to) selling direct, treat
the entire channel as a group of customers – and they are, since they’re buying your product and re-selling it.
Understand their needs and deliver strong marketing programs; you’ll maximize everyone’s revenue in the
process.
BEST CASE NEUTRAL CASE WORST CASE
You probably aren’t hitting your
You’ve used one or more distribution revenue goals because your
You’re using one or more
channels to grow your revenue and distribution strategy is in trouble.
distribution channels with
market share more quickly than you
average success. You may not
would have otherwise. With your current system, you may
have as many channel partners as
not be effectively reaching your end-
you’d like, but your current
Your end-users get the information users; your prospects probably aren’t
system is working moderately
and service they need before and getting the information and service
well.
after the sale. they need to buy your product.
You devote resources to the
If you reach your end-user through Your current system may also be
program, but you wonder
wholesalers, VARs or other channel difficult to manage. For example,
whether you’d be better off
partners, you’ve created many channel members may not sell at your
building an alternative
successful marketing programs to suggested price; they don’t follow up
distribution method -- one that
drive revenue through your channel on leads you deliver; they don’t
could help you grow more
and you’re committed to their service the product very well and
aggressively than you are now.
success. you’re taking calls from angry
customers.
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16. Key concepts & steps
Before you begin
You can evaluate a new distribution channel or improve your channel marketing /
management at any time. It’s especially important to think about distribution when
you’re going after a new customer segment, releasing a new product, or looking for
ways to aggressively grow your business.
Evaluate how your end-users need to buy
Your distribution strategy should deliver the information and service your prospects need. For each customer
segment, consider
How and where they prefer to buy
Whether they need personalized education and training
Whether they need additional products or services to be used alongside yours
Whether your product needs to be customized or installed
Whether your product needs to be serviced
Match end-user needs to a distribution strategy
If your end-users need a great deal of information and service, your company can deliver it directly
through a sales force. You can also build a channel of qualified resellers, consultants or resellers. The
size of the market and your price will probably dictate which scenario is best.
If the buying process is fairly straightforward, you can sell direct via a website/catalog or perhaps
through a wholesale/retail structure. You may also use an inbound telemarketing group or a field sales
team.
If you need complete control over your product’s delivery and service, adding a channel probably isn’t
right for you.
Identify natural partners
If you want to grow beyond the direct model, look for companies that have relationships with your end-users. If
consultants, wholesalers or retailers already reach your customer base, they’re natural partners.
Build your channel
If you’re setting up a distribution channel with one or more partners, treat it as a sales process:
Approach the potential channel partner and “sell” the value of the partnership
Establish goals, service requirements and reporting requirements
Deliver inventory (if necessary) and sales/support materials
Train the partner
Run promotions and programs to support the partner and help them increase sales
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17. Minimize pricing conflicts
If you use multiple channels, carefully map out the price for each step in your channel and include a fair profit
for each type of partner. Then compare the price that the end-user will pay; if a customer can buy from one
channel at a lower price than another, your partners will rightfully have concerns. Pricing conflict is common
but it can jeopardize your entire strategy, so do your best to map out the price at each step and develop the best
solution possible.
Drive revenue through the channel
Service your channel partners as you’d service your best customers and work with them to drive revenue. For
example, provide them with marketing funds or materials to promote your products; run campaigns to generate
leads and forward them to your partners.
What’s next?
As you’re creating a new channel you’ll need a pricing strategy and sales
process. When your channel is up and running, you can start launching
marketing campaigns to channel partners and end-users.
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18. Pricing
Price is one of the classic “4 Ps” of marketing (product, price, place, promotion). Yet in many B2B companies,
marketers aren’t necessarily involved in pricing strategy.
Pricing is a complex subject – there are many factors to consider, both short- and long-term. For
example, your prices need to
Reflect the value you provide versus your competitors
Consider what the market will truly pay for your offering
Enable you to reach your revenue and market share goals
Maximize your profits
When you offer a truly unique product or service with little direct competition, it can be challenging to establish
your price. Put together a strong strategy and competitive analysis so you can see
What your prospects might pay for other solutions to their problems
Where your price should fall in relation to theirs
When your price, value proposition and competitive position are aligned, you’re in the best
situation to maximize revenue and profits. For example, here are three scenarios that show the
relationship between these elements.
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19. HIGHEST PRICE AVERAGE PRICE LOWEST PRICE
Like Company A, Company B’s The market cares most about price
Company A is one of the best
value proposition is product because the product is viewed as a
consulting firms in the world.
leadership, but their secondary commodity.
Their consultants come from top
value prop is price. There’s a lot of
schools, and they work with
competition and their product is Company C focuses on finding new
Fortune 100 clients to implement
only slightly better than the ways to lower costs and pass
complex, large-scale projects.
alternatives. savings on to customers. Their
value proposition is operational
Company A’s value proposition is
Company B’s messages focus on efficiency and they consistently
product leadership. Their clients
product leadership with a deliver the same product at a
are buying the best expertise they
secondary focus on price. They better price.
can find, and they’re less sensitive
regularly review the market, run
to price because they care most
promotions, and adjust prices to Company C regularly evaluates
about getting top talent.
maintain their competitive position. their competitors’ prices to make
sure they’re delivering on their
Therefore, Company A’s services
The company is also working to promise. If a competitor runs a
can be priced as high or higher
develop a premium product that promotion, Company C counters
than their competitors.
can warrant a higher price. with a better one.
What would happen if these companies used a different pricing strategy?
HIGHEST PRICE AVERAGE PRICE LOWEST PRICE
If Company B charges a premium
By dropping their hourly rate, If Company C’s prices rise in
price for an average product, they’ll
Company A gains more clients. relation to those of their
have a very difficult time generating
They hire more consultants, but competitors, their sales will
interest in their product.
since they’re charging less per plummet – their market is
hour, they can’t afford the same shopping on price, not factors like
Yet Company B may be able to
top-tier talent. product leadership or customer
implement a small price increase to
intimacy.
raise revenue and profits; it
Company A is putting their
depends how much more its
“prestige” brand in jeopardy. If Company C cannot maintain its
customers are willing to spend. By
However, if there isn’t a strong operational efficiency and cost
analyzing price sensitivity and
market for prestige, this strategy leadership, it will need to develop
testing different prices, they can
may be the best one for the new products or markets for its
evaluate the strength and potential
company long-term. existing product.
of this new strategy.
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20. Do you see your company in one of these scenarios?
BEST CASE NEUTRAL CASE WORST CASE
You don’t necessarily have a pricing Your price is misaligned with your
Your price completely supports strategy but you’re probably in the value proposition and what your
your value proposition, enabling right range. You enter a moderate market is willing to pay. Your
you to maximize your revenue and number of price negotiations and prospects and customers are
profit. you win some, lose some. You constantly fighting with you on
wonder whether you could increase price and it takes its toll on your
revenue and profit with either a team. You often have to discount
price increase or decrease. heavily to make a sale.
Key concepts & steps
Before you begin
It’s best to create your brand strategy and identify your distribution
channels before you develop your pricing strategy. By doing so, you’ll ensure
that your pricing reflects your value proposition and reinforces your brand; you
can also minimize pricing conflicts with your channel partners.
Match your pricing strategy to your value proposition
Your price sends a strong message to your market – it needs to be consistent with the value you’re delivering.
If your value proposition is operational efficiency, then your price needs to be extremely competitive.
If your value proposition is product leadership or customer intimacy, a low price sends the wrong
message. After all, if a luxury item isn’t expensive, is it really a luxury?
Understand your cost structure and profitability goals
Companies calculate these costs differently, so verify the exact calculations your company uses for
Cost of goods sold (COGS): the cost to physically produce a product or service
Gross profit: the difference between the revenue you earn on a product and the cost to physically
produce it
In addition, understand how much profit the company needs to generate. You’ll be far more effective
when considering discount promotions – you’ll know exactly how low you can go and still be profitable.
Analyze your competitors’ prices
Look at a wide variety of direct and indirect competitors to gauge where your price falls. If your value
proposition is operational efficiency, evaluate your competitors on a regular basis to ensure that you’re
continually competitive.
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21. Determine price sensitivity
A higher price typically means lower volume. Yet you may generate more total revenue and/or profit with fewer
units at the higher price; it depends on how sensitive your customers are to price fluctuations. If they’re
extremely sensitive, you may be better off at a much lower price with substantially greater volume.
Estimate how sensitive your customers are to fluctuations – it will help you determine the right price and
volume combination. More importantly, you can estimate how a price change can impact your revenue.
What’s next?
Once you’ve finalized your pricing strategy, you can plan and launch your
marketing campaigns.
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22. Sales Process
How do prospects buy your product or service?
Does a single decision-maker find a product and
buy on the spot, or does s/he go through many steps and approvals first? Perhaps there are multiple
departments involved in the decision, each with its own needs?
A sales process is a defined series of steps you follow as you guide prospects from initial contact
to purchase. It begins when you first identify a new prospect:
STEP 1 STEP 2 STEP 3 STEP 4 STEP 5
A prospect responds to A sales rep calls the Prospect signs an
In-person meeting Your team submits
a campaign & requests prospect to explain agreement & makes first
& product demo a proposal
information your product payment
A documented sales process is a flowchart that explains
Each distinct step a prospect takes
Knowledge the prospect needs to move to the next step
Literature & tools you can provide to help the prospect move forward
Length of time a prospect needs at each step
Conversion rates: the percentage of prospects who move from one step to the next
With a documented sales process, you have a powerful tool that enables you to
Sell more efficiently
Generate more accurate sales and revenue reports
Estimate the revenue and return on investment (ROI) of your marketing campaigns
See which stages take the most time and find ways to move prospects forward
Create better literature and tools
Improve your campaigns
Minimize the amount of time your reps spend on estimates and forecasts
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23. Do you see your company in one of these scenarios?
BEST CASE NEUTRAL CASE WORST CASE
You have a well-designed process You may or may not have a You don’t have a process or use one
that measures the number of defined sales process. You that doesn’t match how prospects
prospects you have at each stage, generally follow the same steps to want to buy.
how long they stay in each stage, close a customer, but there’s a big
and the revenue your entire pipeline variance in the amount of time it You deliver all of the information
represents. takes to close. In fact, even your about your product but then seem
strongest reps have trouble closing to lose control of the prospect.
You deliver the right amount of certain types of prospects. Some prospects end up buying, but
information prospects need at each you don’t know why the others
step, which helps them make Your forecasts are probably all don’t.
decisions more quickly and move to manual and generally accurate,
the next stage. but you wish you had a thorough It’s a constant battle to figure out
snapshot to show exactly how how many real prospects you have
You use your sales process to create many accounts are at a certain and what they’re worth. Your sales
more successful marketing stage and what you need to do to team often spends valuable time
campaigns because you can predict close. creating manual reports instead of
how many leads will become selling, which further hurts your
customers and what those leads will revenue.
be worth to your company.
Key concepts & steps
Before you begin
If you don’t have a defined sales process, it’s a valuable investment that can
improve your entire sales and marketing program. Create processes for each
distribution channel, product and/or customer segment.
Determine how your prospects buy
List the steps you think prospects logically take from the time they recognize a problem to the time they buy.
Talk with customers or ask your sales reps for more insight. Figure out what steps they take, what they need to
know and how you can deliver that information most effectively.
Create your process
For each step your prospects need to take, list
What the prospect needs to learn
Literature & tools you can provide to help the prospect move forward
The length of time a prospect needs at the step
The percentage of prospects who move from each step to the next (your “conversion rate”)
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24. Project campaign results & revenue
When you have a sales process with conversion rates, you can generate solid pipeline and revenue reports. For
example, if you have 50 prospects at the presentation stage, your process may show that 20% will become
customers. That means those 50 prospects should deliver 10 new customers. Your process will also tell you
when that should happen and how much revenue those prospect represent.
You can use a similar calculation to project results from new marketing campaigns. For example, if a campaign
should produce 100 qualified leads, you can estimate the number of meetings, presentations, and new
customers the campaign will generate.
Improve your process to maximize revenue
When you have a defined process, it’s easier to test ideas for improving results. For example, you can
Identify spots where prospects get “stuck” in the process and try new materials or messages to help
them move forward
Measure how well different reps convert at each step and help those that aren’t doing as well
See how leads from different marketing campaigns convert and improve your campaigns
Create campaigns to “recycle” leads that fall out of the process at various spots
What’s next?
After you’ve documented your sales process, develop the literature & tools
you’ll need to guide your prospects through each step. Add your process to
your customer relationship management (CRM) software so that each
account is assigned to a stage at all times. Then you can run reports and
measure your progress and improve your sales management.
You’ll also use your sales process to measure the success of marketing
campaigns; for a specific campaign, you can see how many leads entered
the process and made it to each step.
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25. Marketing
Campaigns
In many B2B companies, a sales team is the primary method for reaching out to the market. Salespeople call
prospects and customers, but they can only do so much in a day. Marketing campaigns can dramatically
increase your reach.
A marketing campaign is a series of touches with your market to communicate a key message.
The key word is “series” since it usually takes multiple touches for your audience to recognize your message and
respond.
Marketing campaigns can include many different media:
Email, search, banners and other online Telemarketing
marketing Trade shows and events
Publicity Print, radio and other “traditional” media
Direct mail
Here are three sample campaigns:
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26. DRIVE EXISTING
PROSPECTS TO YOUR HIT YOUR MARKET WITH
GENERATE NEW LEADS
TRADE SHOW BOOTH & A SPECIAL OFFER
VIP RECEPTION
1. Use search to generate traffic to 1. Mail a postcard to attendees 3 6. 1. Run banner ads on industry
your website. weeks before the show; invite websites and targeted email
2. Prospect requests information them to your booth with an newsletters.
via email. intriguing incentive. 2. Send out a special email to your
3. Email the requested 2. Mail a special invite to key house list.
information. prospects and customers to for 3. Create an intriguing story and
4. Call the prospect; qualify the a VIP reception. Ask them to tie it to your offer. Write a
prospect further and determine RSVP by phone, email or URL. search-optimized press release
next steps. 3. Call key prospects and and post on your site; distribute
customers as a second effort. releases and pitch to a key
4. Send an email to all confirmed industry reporter.
attendees and 3 days before 4. Run a series of paid search ads.
the event.
5. Email the non-respondents
one last time.
In B2B it’s always best to start with your company’s annual goals and develop campaigns to meet those
numbers. For example, when you know how many new customers you need, you can calculate how many leads
you’ll need, then design campaigns to generate those leads throughout the year.
With solid planning, a jolt of creativity and focus on measurement, you’ll be in a strong position for success.
BEST CASE NEUTRAL CASE WORST CASE
You plan and execute your Your campaigns aren’t the Your marketing programs tend
campaigns to hit specific goals. most creative or the splashiest, to be reactive -- suddenly you’re
You don’t always hit them, but but you’ve hit many of your low on leads or falling short of
you test and improve different marketing goals. You don’t test your goals and you launch a
elements; the ROI on your but your response rate is fine. campaign to fix the problem.
overall budget is above your You don’t know your ROI but
goal. you generally know which Since your programs don’t seem
campaigns work best. to work, it’s difficult to gain
You focus on an offer and call- budget approval for future
to-action, and you touch your Yet when you’re faced with campaigns that could be more
prospects several times and ambitious annual goals, you well-planned and executed.
follow up when appropriate. have problems gaining budget
approval. Since you stick with It’s a vicious cycle and you don’t
You recognize the challenges in the same campaigns year in know how to get out of it.
measuring results, but you do and out, it’s also difficult to
what you can; it helps you figure out how to generate
improve the next time around. additional leads.
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27. Key concepts & steps
Before you begin
Your brand and pricing strategies play a significant role in
your marketing efforts, so nail down those strategies before
launching any major campaigns. If you sell through multiple
distribution channels, don’t forget to create campaigns for
each. You’ll also refer to your sales process to estimate
revenue and ROI for each campaign.
Quantify your goals
Plan your campaigns to meet your annual revenue and volume goals. For example, if you’re trying to
generate 100 new customers, figure out how many leads you’ll need and when you’ll need them.
Think about how you’ll use different media. For example, your sales team may be able to generate 30%
of your leads through prospecting; the rest may come from telemarketing, email, direct mail, search
marketing, webinars, trade shows and more.
Generate campaign ideas and strategies
Identify all of the business goals that will need marketing support. You may need campaigns to
generate and nurture prospects, sell direct or through a channel, or market to existing customers.
Evaluate ideas and options: traditional sales activities, internet marketing, telemarketing, direct mail,
email, publicity and more.
Target your audience
With more specific targeting, you can speak more directly to the prospect and raise your response rates
in the process.
Deliver one or two key messages and your call-to-action
If you include every detail about your product and company, it’s easy for prospects to become
overwhelmed. Just move a prospect one step at a time.
Be creative -- your market is bombarded with messages daily, so grab their attention and engage them.
Plan to measure
When you measure your campaigns, it’s easier to gain budget approval the next time around. You’ll also know
exactly which programs produce the highest return.
Establish how you’ll measure each campaign. If there are variables you can’t measure, decide how you
will account for those results.
Identify how you’ll capture the data you’ll need – unique phone numbers, unique URLs, etc.
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28. Plan your fulfillment
Your fulfillment processes can help or hurt your close rate, so make sure you outline your requirements.
For example, if you’re running a campaign where prospects request a software demo and it doesn’t
arrive for a week, your prospects may lose interest.
Continually test and improve
Even on a small campaign, you can evaluate your ad, copy, list or other factors before you spend your
entire budget.
Choose a subset of your list or two versions of an ad; test them in small quantities and choose the best
one for rollout. Then you can test a second variable against the winner in the first test.
Keep the testing cycle going and track your results over time. You’ll improve your response rates and
return on investment.
What’s next?
Include your major campaigns in your annual marketing
plan and budget, then implement your plans and strategies
throughout the year: email marketing, business
development, trade shows, publicity, online
advertising, customer retention and more.
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29. Marketing Plan & Budget
Most businesspeople agree that good planning is essential for success. Even so, it’s surprising how many
companies don’t create a thorough plan to generate and manage their customers.
A marketing plan is a detailed roadmap that outlines all your marketing strategies, tactics,
activities, costs and projected results over a period of time. The plan keeps your entire team focused
on specific goals – it’s a critical resource for your entire company.
A good marketing plan typically includes:
Financial goals Sales plan
Positioning strategy Major marketing campaigns
Brand strategy Detailed budget
Product/service overview Dates to review progress
Detailed goals by product, distribution
channel &/or customer segment
It takes time to develop a solid plan, but it’s important because it ties all of your activities to tangible goals. It’s
also a great opportunity to focus on the future, generate new ideas, and inspire your team. Even a simple plan is
better than none, but when you invest more effort upfront, you’ll have a better roadmap toward your goals.
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30. BEST CASE NEUTRAL CASE WORST CASE
Your marketing plan is a detailed You’re incredibly busy, so it’s You don’t typically create a marketing
roadmap to meet your goals. difficult to invest the time in a plan. You have a budget, but the
detailed marketing plan. Instead, numbers are haphazard. Things
You recognize that the time you you develop a basic plan that’s change so quickly – why spend the
invest to create a solid plan is based on last year’s version. time?
perhaps the best time you’ll invest
all year – it helps you work through You include general revenue goals, You take a similar approach with the
new strategies, issues, ideas, and general sales strategies, and basic strategies that should drive a
numbers. campaigns; you stick with proven marketing plan. You probably don’t
techniques. Budgets are based on have a positioning or brand strategy;
When it’s done, your team focuses last year’s numbers. you’re missing out on distribution
on executing the plan and channels or partnerships; your
measuring your progress all year You could be more ambitious with campaigns are ineffective and you may
long. your revenue goals if your not invest in customer retention.
company was willing to try new
As a result, you’ve been able to hit things, but each year you stick A plan is a compass. Without one, you
your goals, grow your business, and with the tried-and-true. may be traveling in the right direction,
enjoy the journey. but it’s incredibly difficult to stay on
course – and that can drastically limit
your success.
Key concepts & steps
Before you begin
A marketing plan should address all of your strategies, tactics and
budget, so you’ll need to review your brand strategy, pricing
strategy and distribution channels beforehand. You’ll also outline
your major marketing campaigns for the year since they’ll be in
your budget.
Set your annual goals
Build your entire marketing plan to achieve the goals that you define:
Quantitative (numeric) goals such as total revenue, profit,
number of customers, units sold, and breakdowns by product
or channel as needed.
Strategic goals -- for example, you may want to expand into a
new market with a new distribution channel, or you may need to reposition your brand to reflect a
change in your business.
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31. Highlight your competitive position, value proposition and brand strategy
Your positioning strategy defines how you’ll differentiate your offering from your competitors.
Your value proposition defines the primary value you deliver: operational efficiency, product leadership
or customer intimacy.
Your brand strategy defines what you stand for and how you’ll communicate with the market.
Outline any plans for your products & services
If you need to do anything to strengthen your product line and better deliver on your value proposition, address
those issues in your plan.
Develop your tactical sales plan
The number of sales reps you’ll need and the markets they’ll target
Whether you’ll need to hire, train, or develop new compensation plans
Top priority markets, industries or customer segments; if you have a list of key prospects, include them
Your plan for managing current customers
Plans for launching any new distribution channels and driving revenue through existing channels
Outline your major marketing campaigns
You don’t need to list every campaign -- just outline your major promotional plans for the year. You’ll need to
set your budget too, so the more planning you do now, the better. Your plans should include:
The top three campaigns you’ll run to generate leads, nurture customers, close, and/or market to
existing customers
The media you’ll use (for example, email, online, print, telemarketing, trade shows, publicity, etc.)
Tools, technologies or resources you’ll need – for example, a new website, an email service provider, a
new piece of software
Your ROI and other financial goals
Develop a budget
Budgeting can be a difficult process. Many companies just estimate or base their budget on last year.
An estimate is better than nothing, but if you’ve defined your major campaigns and needs, you can
develop better numbers.
You can also use ROI to determine the appropriate total budget for your marketing efforts.
Revisit your plan regularly
The planning process itself is incredibly valuable, but if you don't review the plan regularly, it’s easy to
lose focus. Continually revisit the plan and measure your progress.
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32. What’s next?
When you’ve finished your plan, it’s time to execute. You may need to
create new messages, literature, website or other tools and
processes for your campaigns, but after that, focus on generating
and managing your customers.
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33. Naming
How important is the name of your product, service or
company? It depends on your industry, the amount of
time you’ve been in business, your competitors and how
you want to position yourself in the market.
Your name is an extension of your brand, and it can reinforce the value you provide or distance
you from it. When you’re developing a name, you have a number of options:
Use the founder or inventor’s name (Hewlett-Packard)
Describe what you do (Southwest Airlines)
Describe an experience or image (Sprint)
Take a word out of context (Apple)
Make up a word (Google)
It’s important to decide what your name should mean and represent. For example, if you’re running a company
that provides naming services, your name is a sample of your work – it should be great, right?
Here are some companies that provide naming services:
BEST CASE NEUTRAL CASE WORST CASE
These companies appear to be more These companies all sound the A naming agency with no name:
creative and better at finding a name same:
that stands out from the Werner & Stevens
competition: The Naming Co. Kowalchek Associates
Brighter Naming
A Hundred Monkeys Tradebrand (Hypothetical examples, but there
Igor Catchword are a lot of naming companies
Namebase named after their founders!)
Lasting Names
Name One!
All of these companies may be fantastic with many years of experience and terrific track records. And they each
could be very well-known in certain markets or industries.
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34. However, if you need to select three companies to bid on your naming project, which companies would you
contact? Are you more likely to call a company with a unique name, an average name, or no name?
This example shows that you have one chance to make a first impression. Many of your potential
customers know virtually nothing about your company and a great name can open doors; a poor name may shut
them.
The process is especially challenging because there are more than 24 million businesses in the United States.
U.S. trademark law protects business names, so when you find one you like, make sure you can use it. If you
infringe on a copyright, you could be forced to abandon your new name after investing a lot of time and money.
Also think about your internet marketing goals, since you may have to find a URL to match your name. There
are over 60 million domain names registered worldwide, and some experts believe that over 98% of the
dictionary is registered as a domain name.
Don’t let these challenges stop you from finding the best name you can – there’s a lot at stake:
BEST CASE NEUTRAL CASE WORST CASE
A poor name can neutralize or even
A great name can create buzz,
negate the work you do to build a
position you as a true leader and You look and sound like everybody
position in the market. You may
innovator, and reinforce your value else.
have trouble generating interest in
proposition in a word or two. That’s
your company and spend more time
powerful. It can convey a culture, a You’ve missed an opportunity to
and money educating the market
position, and differentiate the convey an important message, but
about your value. A poor name can
company from the rest of the at least you’re not hurting yourself.
also limit your opportunities if you
market.
expand into other markets.
Key concepts & steps
Before you begin
Since your name is an extension of your brand, it’s important to develop
your brand strategy before you start the naming process.
Do you need to hire someone?
With a good process and strategy, you can probably develop a good name on
your own. However, you may not have the resources or desire to handle the
project internally. While it’s no guarantee that a firm or consultant will
develop a better name, they may do it more quickly and objectively.
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35. There are a number of factors to consider, including
The stakes: If you’re investing a lot of money launching a new product to a major market with
established competition, the stakes are high.
Your confidence in your team’s creative firepower or objectivity.
The amount of time and energy you have to devote to the project.
Whether you can afford to bring in an outside resource.
Develop a strategy
Determine what your name needs to accomplish.
Decide how it will work with existing product or service names (if applicable).
Determine what kind of name to develop – descriptive, invented, founder’s name, etc.
Develop objective criteria to evaluate the names you generate.
Generate plenty of potential names
If you’re competing beyond your local area, you may find that many of your potential names (or URLs) are
already taken, so you’ll need a long list. Invite a variety of people for a brainstorming session; plan it well and
capture every idea for further evaluation.
Evaluate the list against your criteria
Your goal is to objectively find the name that meets your criteria, so be careful about asking friends and
family whether they “like” a name. For example, a name that raises eyebrows may do so because it’s different –
and it may be the most memorable and powerful one in the bunch.
Also test the name to make sure it
Sounds good over the phone (for example, when a sales rep calls a prospect)
Won’t be constantly mispronounced or misspelled, which defeats the purpose of a name
Isn’t confusing
Conveys what you need it to convey
Has a URL that works with it
Protect your name
It’s important to protect your name to the appropriate degree. If you choose a name that infringes on another
company’s copyright, you could receive a cease-and-desist letter and have to go to court and/or change your
name after months or even years of use.
By protecting your name, you also gain the ability to prevent future competitors from using it.
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36. What’s next?
After you select a new name, you can create your logo and corporate
identity, then begin creating the messages to use throughout your sales
materials and marketing efforts.
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37. Corporate
Identity
When was the last time someone gave you a
fantastic business card? Did you turn it over
and look at it closely? Did you comment on
it? And did you generate some sort of
impression of that person and company?
Corporate identity is an extension of your brand and includes
everything with your logo or contact information:
Business cards Proposal/quote templates
Envelopes Invoices/statements
Letterhead Memos
Mailing labels Signage
Email templates & signatures Promotional items
Fax covers
Many companies spend time and money on things like business cards yet overlook proposal templates, invoices
and email signatures that prospects see more frequently. For example, when an employee customizes an email
template with unusual designs or fonts, it can contradict an expensive and serious business card – and convey a
far different impression to the customer.
Each element in your identity should use the same fonts, colors, layout, etc. The design itself may not be
incredibly important unless you’re in a creative field, but consistency and professionalism make an impression.
In many cases it may be a first impression, so why not make a good one?
BEST CASE NEUTRAL CASE WORST CASE
Some of your identity is great and Your prospects and customers see a
Every touch with your prospects
other things, like invoices or mismash of poorly-produced
and customers is consistent and
shipping labels, don’t match up. identity. They may wonder how you
professional. They see a simple,
Prospects and customers probably can deliver the product or service
effective design that strengthens
notice, but you don’t think it’s a you’re selling if you can’t produce a
your messages.
problem. professional-looking document.
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38. Key concepts & steps
Before you begin
Naturally you need a name before you can create your corporate
identity. You should also develop a brand strategy since your
identity should support it and help bring it to life.
If you’re already in business, does all of your identity
reflect your brand?
Check everything from invoices and shipping labels to email
signatures. Make sure your logo is used correctly (sometimes
they get accidentally re-sized) and that all of your materials are consistent with your value proposition and
brand strategy. For example, if you’re focusing on innovative, expensive new products but you have flimsy
business cards, you’re not reinforcing your value.
Create professional, consistent templates for every touch with your market
Use a consistent style for everything your company sends out. It make take only ten minutes to create a better
template, and that template may be seen by hundreds or thousands of prospects and customers over time.
Keep inventory
Templates can be altered or misplaced; make sure team knows how to use them and check them regularly.
What’s next?
Once you’ve finishing your identity, the typical next step is to
focus on your sales literature and your website.
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39. Messaging
How do you respond when someone asks
“what does your company do?” Do all your
team members answer the same way? And is your
response compelling so the listener wants to learn more, or do you sound
like everyone else?
“Messages” are written and verbal statements that quickly describe what you do and how you’re
different. They’re used throughout your interactions with your market:
The “elevator pitch” – the 30-second response to “what do you do?”
Sales & marketing materials – sales literature, websites, presentations and campaigns all use messages
of various lengths
The introductory statement in a phone call
Press releases – the blurb at the bottom of the release that explains what the company does
Slogans
Your mission statement
Good messages take your competitive positioning and brand strategy to the next level. They hone
in on what’s important to your market and communicate it consistently and effectively.
BEST CASE NEUTRAL CASE WORST CASE
By carefully crafting your messages, Ho-hum messages don’t help you Without consistent messages,
you can strengthen your value stand out, but as long as they’re not individual team members do their
proposition, your brand and the inaccurate or poorly written, they own authoring and the results are
reasons your prospects should buy. probably won’t hurt. You just miss rarely good, let alone consistent.
out on the opportunity to Poor messages confuse the market
It’s easy to communicate your value. strengthen your position. and can contradict the other
The market “gets it” very quickly, strategies you’ve worked hard to
speeding up the sales process. implement.
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40. Key concepts & steps
Before you begin
Before you start writing, define your brand strategy – it will help
you identify what your messages should convey. If you need
messages for a marketing campaign or program from your
marketing plan, plan them out so you’ll know exactly what kind
of messages you need. And if you haven’t finalized your name,
you’ll want to do that before messaging as well.
Define your writing style and requirements
Before you start writing, define your style requirements -- tone,
voice, style, vocabulary – so the writing will be consistent and match
your brand strategy.
Create an elevator pitch
The elevator pitch describes who you are, what you do, who your customers are and why they should buy from
you. When you’ve written it, test it to see how it sounds and how long it takes (no more than 30 seconds).
Create your positioning statements
Write statements of various lengths – 25, 50 and 100 words – so you have a message length that fits a variety of
materials. The shorter statements focus on the value and brand position; the longer ones add features and
benefits.
Create a tagline/slogan
Your tagline/slogan is a more succinct phrase used in campaigns. It can be one word or a short phrase and for
most business writers, it’s harder to create. You may want to hire a copywriter for this one.
Create your mission statement
An average mission statement describes why you’re in business. A great mission statement is compelling,
shows why you’re different and conveys your company’s personality.
Determine where to use the messages
Make sure to use your new messages consistently. Train your team to use the messages and audit your
materials periodically to make sure they’re still working in the future.
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41. What’s next?
Your messages feed all of your communication with your market.
Use them in your sales literature and tools, your website and
then all of your campaigns.
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42. Sales Literature
& Tools
Do you know many companies that can sell their product or service without literature or other supporting
materials? It’s tough to do.
Sales literature and tools help you communicate and strengthen your messages. They’re also
known as “marketing communications” or “collateral” and they may include:
Company brochures Websites
Product data sheets Newsletters
Case studies Reference lists
White papers Proposal templates
PowerPoint presentations Calculators
The printed word can carry a lot of credibility, so your materials are important tools in your arsenal. They
reinforce your brand and can create a lasting impression on your prospects if done well. Plus a single printed
piece can reach multiple decision-makers when your primary contact passes it along.
Good literature and tools are tightly integrated with your sales process. Rather than inundating a prospect with
all of your information at once, break that information into distinct pieces that answer a prospect’s key
questions at a specific stage in the process. As a result, your prospects can quickly absorb what’s most relevant,
make decisions more quickly and move to the next stage.
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43. BEST CASE NEUTRAL CASE WORST CASE
Your sales literature and tools are Your literature and tools are Your literature and tools don’t
strong elements in your arsenal. typical and general. They convey support your brand or value
They convey your brand, speak much of the information your proposition – they’re working
directly to your prospects, and prospects need, but lack the against you.
deliver the right amount of singular focus to be as effective as
information at the right time. They they could be.
truly help you move prospects
forward as quickly as possible.
Key concepts & steps
Before you begin
Develop your sales tools and literature after you’ve created your brand
strategy, corporate identity and messages. You may also identify
the need for new materials when you write your annual marketing plan.
Analyze your current materials
If you think your existing literature and tools could be more effective, take inventory:
Review each piece to determine its sole focus.
Ask your sales team and others for feedback on whether the piece works.
Make sure the piece supports your value proposition and brand strategy.
Make sure each piece is delivered at the right time.
Determine what materials you need
List the steps of your sales process, then
Brainstorm the materials you could use to answer a prospect’s questions at each step
Define a singular purpose for each piece of literature or tool
Write, design & print your materials
To develop your content, focus on the singular purpose of each piece.
Outline the content that needs to be in each piece
Hire vendors for design & writing if needed
Research and write the content
Develop your design requirements
Design the piece
Get quotes and work with your chosen printer to ensure that you’re happy with the final outcome
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44. Train your team to use the materials
Make sure everyone knows the purpose of each piece and when to use it.
What’s next?
If you think your website could be stronger, it’s a logical next step.
Like literature, your site should support your sales process, deliver
valuable information and reinforce your brand. It can also be used for
a wide variety of marketing campaigns.
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45. Websites
These days, most business buyers use
the web to read news, research solutions,
find vendors and learn about other companies.
And whether they learn about your company online
or through other means, most buyers and potential
partners will review your site before they do business with you.
Your website is potentially the most powerful sales &
marketing tool you have. A good site plays an enormous role in
your sales process and can help you:
Generate leads
Nurture existing leads and move them closer to purchase
Deliver information about your products & services in a compelling way
Process orders, cross- and up-sell, and run special promotions
Communicate with existing customers and distribution channels
Generate publicity
Think of your site as an interactive brochure that speaks with different groups and converts visitors into
prospects and customers. It’s an extension of your brand and an example of the quality of work you do.
Although a site can be a substantial investment, it doesn’t have to be expensive; it just needs to effectively
communicate with your market and support your brand. Yet when you develop your site with richer content
and some basic marketing functionality, you gain broad and potentially lucrative marketing capabilities.
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